The U.S. Spending Surge Is Underway

 | Mar 31, 2021 05:58AM ET

h2 Stimulus payments creates a strong platform for growth

To get any meaning out of the February personal income and spending report we need to look at it in combination with January data. The $600 stimulus payment in early January, together with ongoing support from extended and uprated unemployment benefits, lifted incomes by 10.1% MoM.

Put another way, as the chart below shows, household incomes were $2.5tn higher on an annualised basis versus February last year. An astonishing figure, that has given Americans the cash flow to not only spend more, as seen with the upwardly revised 3%MoM real spending growth figure for January but to also pay down credit card balances and to save more.

The Federal Reserve’s flow of funds data shows that cash, checking and savings deposits have increased by $3tn since 3Q19. That means as the re-opening gathers momentum there is an incredibly strong platform for consumer spending growth.

The fact that there wasn’t a stimulus payment in February accounts for all of the 7.1% January to February drop in incomes, but again it is important to point out that income levels this February are still $1tn annualised higher than they were last February. With another $1,400 stimulus payment having hit bank accounts in March – nearly $400bn has been paid out by the government - we must be looking for a huge surge in March and April income data.

h2 Incomes have soared through the pandemic/h2

Contributions to the change in household incomes versus Feb 2020 (USDtn)